
Family values
prompted Nickelodeon's move to a one-brand strategy last year after internal research revealed that the first generation of viewers turned into parents. The audience for the 30-year-old brand had
grown much larger than the company expected, Pamela Kaufman, chief marketing officer at Nickelodeon/MTVN Kids and Family Group, told attendees at the Forrester Marketing Forum 2010 in Los Angeles
Thursday.
Kaufman explained how shaping the message required Nickelodeon to outline and refocus on priorities. The brand has always been Nickelodeon, but she says consumers became confused
about what Nickelodeon represented. Pointing to numerous acquisitions, she said each organization had different goals.
So the company set out on a two-year path to confirm Nickelodeon as the
brand, and put a plan in place to get people to stop calling characters such as Sponge Bob the brand.
advertisement
advertisement
Shaping the message requires Nickelodeon to set new priorities. The one-brand strategy
rolled out Sept. 28, 2009. A new creative to support the strategy accompanied the launch. It wasn't just a new logo, but involved rethinking what each part of the company represents.
Kaufman
says the one-brand strategy brought clarity that differentiates the company from the competition. Projects move seamlessly across the organization. The philosophy took a focus on embracing families,
being leaders, championing creativity, listening and learning, being diverse and inclusive, breaking rules and taking risks, thinking big and having fun, and thinking globally.
Apparently, older
brands with products that take on their own persona can become challenging for marketers that want to keep that associateion with long-time audiences and fans, according to one conference attendee
from a major brand that asked for anonymity.
For Nickelodeon, the one-brand strategy unified the company, and made it more powerful. It proved beneficial to consumer because it helped them
to more easily identify Nickelodeon as the brand during the transition into the company's new culture, Kaufman says.
The one-brand strategy also should better support the company's July 2
release of "The Last Airbender," a movie based on Nickelodeon's animated series "Avatar." Nintendo snagged the video game, developed by THQ, and plans to release it for Wii, DS and DSi devices prior
to the film's release.
Meanwhile, Nickelodeon promoted Marjorie Cohn to president, development and original programming at Nickelodeon/MTVN Kids and Family Group on Tuesday. Cohn reports to
Nickelodeon/MTVN Kids and Family Group president Cyma Zarghami.